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Saturday, July 9, 2016

Republicans and the Tightening Demographic Noose: Asian Americans

Much has been said of the Republican Party’s difficulties
with the Black and Latino minorities in the United States. Republican acceptance of the traditionally
racist policies that continue in the former slave states that make up the core
of the Party’s constituency will continue to keep blacks voting Democratic. Latinos possess a different political and
cultural legacy, but have coalesced into a generally anti-Republican stance
driven by the extreme anti-immigrant policies espoused by Republican candidates. There is, however, another significant
minority that receives little attention with regard to voting and election
impacts—the Asian Americans.

Karthick Ramakrishnan provides an assessment of the
Asian-American minority with regards to political viewpoints and voting
tendencies. His article, How Asian Americans Became Democrats,
appeared in The American Prospect. Ramakrishnan is professor of public
policy at the University of California, Riverside, and director of AAPI Data
and the National Asian American Survey.

Asian Americans are better educated and more affluent
than African Americans or Latinos. While
early immigrants were poor laborers and were discriminated against, and there
is the legacy of the forced interment of the Japanese during World War II, recent
immigration is composed more of educated people seeking greater opportunity rather
than those driven by economic deprivation.
Given this background, Republican pundits once assumed that Asians would
be more at home with the economic policies they promoted. At one point, they might have been correct,
but as the Republican Party changed, so did the voting habits of those with an
Asian heritage.

“In 1992, the majority of Asian
Americans had voted for George H. W. Bush, creating the impression that as an
upwardly mobile and affluent group, they would continue to vote
Republican. But 20 years later, in an
astounding shift, Asian Americans moved 40 points toward the Democrats in
presidential elections. Since they are
also the fastest growing racial group in the United States, the change has
major implications for the future of American politics.”

What caused this change in political support? According to Ramakrishnan it was due to changes
that occurred in the two political parties.

“The actions of parties and
political leaders over the past two decades provide a far better explanation
for the politics of Asian Americans today than do the disparate cultural
traditions that immigrants have brought with them.”

Ramakrishnan claims that Democratic leaders made a conscious
effort to recruit Asian Americans to their way of thinking by becoming more
business friendly starting with the Clinton administration. Of more consequence seems to be the repulsion
generated by the changes in policy incorporated in the Republican agenda. While immigration issues may not be identified
as highest priority, Asian Americans seem to have deep feelings about welcoming
immigrants, encouraging diversity, and according respect to people of other heritages—matters
at which the Republicans fail miserably.
Asian Americans also believe that government has a significant role to
play in society, are willing to pay higher taxes for improved services, support
gun control measures, and reject the Evangelical Christian sentiment that
drives the Party.

Surveys of Asian American sentiments have produced the
following results.

“A 2014 AAPI Data survey of
Asian American registered voters found that 41 percent would consider switching
their support away from a candidate who expresses strong anti-immigrant views.”

“Another development pushing Asian
Americans away from the GOP has been the rise of Christian conservatism in the
Republican Party. The 2012 PEW survey on
Asian Americans indicated that the strongest level of Democratic Party support
comes from Hindus and those who claim no religious affiliation (these groups
make a significant share of Indian Americans and Chinese Americans,
respectively).”

“National surveys have shown
that on issues that matter to them such as education, job creation, and health
care, Asian American voters have consistently favored the Democratic Party and
the positions the Democrats endorse. For
example, Asian American majorities have supported steps to expand health-care
access, such as the Affordable Care Act [Obamacare]….Asian Americans are also strong
supporters of gun control….and they tend to support bigger government spending
even if it means paying higher taxes….”

As the political parties have become more polarized,
Asian Americans have moved more firmly to the side of the Democrats.

“Although Bill Clinton won only
31 percent of the Asian American vote in 1992 (or 36 percent of the two-party
vote if we exclude Ross Perot), Al Gore won 55 percent in 2000, followed by
John Kerry with 56 percent in 2004, and Obama with 62 percent and 73 percent in
2008 and 2012 respectively….Obama won every major national origin group of
Asian Americans in 2012…..”

In 2012, Obama received the greatest support from Indian
Americans at 84% of the vote and the least from Vietnamese Americans at 62%.

One should expect that Asian-American support will again
go predominately to the Democratic candidate in 2016. What might that imply in terms of an
electoral advantage?

Richman concluded that although the Asian American
population was not large (about 5%), it was large enough to matter in
battleground states where every vote counts.

“Coupled with Pacific Islanders,
Asian-Americans represent the nation's fastest-growing minority group. Census
data show that the population grew by 41 percent nationwide from 2000 to 2011,
but at higher rates -- in many cases, much higher -- in nine of 11 states
likely to be key battlegrounds in November's [2012] presidential election.”

Richman also produced this chart to support his
contention.

In a close race, Asian Americans are now numerous enough
to swing an election—and it seems it will only get worse for the Republicans as
time goes on.

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About Me

Hi, my name is Rich Couch. I spent my first career as a physical scientist. Now that I am retired I have chosen to go in another direction. I have had a lifelong love of books and an urge to write. Since I am not a story teller and I am way too old to start a new career I have found an outlet in writing essays combining reviews and my opinions of books and articles on politics and current affairs. My hope is that others will find what I have produced interesting and informative--and well written.